Oakland Mayor’s Race: Don Macleay Interview #2

Followers of this space will remember that this blogger interviewed Oakland Mayor’s Race candidate Don Macleay earlier in the campaign, and for about 20 minutes in front of Merritt Station Cafe at 614 Grand Avenue. But Don wanted to talk again, and this space doesn’t refuse such requests. The result is the funniest and most fun of all of the interviews I’ve conducted thus far.

It is so, because the Green Party candidate who calls himself the “People’s Mayor,” has a good, natural sense of humor that smooths over a wonkish tendency. That quality makes him accessible across race and class lines. Regardless of how the election turns out, Don Macleay has created a good foundation for his political future.

The Mayor Of 40th Street

Already, Don Macleay is arguably the Mayor of 40th Street, where he lives on 40th and Opal. He’s right next to what he calls the “new Temescal Neighborhood.” Don owns what could be called a compound on that corner, marked with his lawn sign and another in support of Measure BB. Don’s tan building houses his East Bay Computer Services, his apartment, and several other tenant businesses. He moved there in 2008, and has what he calls a “Walk, Bike, neighborhood lifestyle.”

Across 40th Street from Don Macleay’s home is what he laughingly refers to as his entertainment: a green building housing a laundry business, where “you can buy crack on certain days…This candidate does not live on Skyline Drive.” That’s a friendly shot at Oakland Mayor’s Race competitor Greg Harland, who does live on Skyline Drive.

Unlike the other mayoral candidates, Macleay does not have an office with an adress; he has a “virtual office” with cell phones being the communications and information exchange system. “We have our network in the cloud, Don says. “We work with smartphones. We keep both the company and the campaign on these smartphones.”

Darth Vader On The Campaign?

In his first room, Macleay has an interesting collection of “stuff,” like a UCLA cup (which should be a Cal cup) and including a Darth Vader helmet because his son’s into Star Wars. But that doesn’t mean Don thinks there’s a Darth Vader in the Oakland Mayor’s Race: “I think..A lot of people want to paint Don Perata as Darth Vader and I think he’s the standard American politician.”

The campaign has “just been great” for Don. He’s having a lot of fun going from forum to forum (there were 30 of them) and spreading his message of reform. Don says Oakland Government is not “representative enough.” He thinks the Oakland City Council is not accessible to the grassroots Oakland activists and wants to change that.

The Pension Reform Issue

Don says the way to reduce the Oakland Pension Deficit is to cash it out on a sliding scale. “It’s the members money. What we have set aside belongs to them, first and foremost.” What Don wants to do is to give the pension system members all of their money up front, and then start a new system of pay-as-you-go. He says Oakland’s government and unions don’t like the idea, but it’s one he’s ready to go forward with should he become Mayor of Oakland.

The People’s Mayor

Our talk continued with a tour of his compound and home. It’s a machinist’s dream, with all kinds of drills and equipment appropriate for everything from bike repair to metal sculpture. He does all of the unlicensed work on his place himself. Don’s also ran a number of businesses and says that his experience “puts me in touch with about 60 percent of the economy.”

The Parking Issue And The Greens

This blogger originally met Don when we worked on what was to be an initiative to change Oakland’s predatory parking laws and system. One that Oakland PUEBLO said was a violation of an Oaklander’s civil rights. He reports that “got him into a lot of trouble with the Greens.” But Don says he was able to convince many Green Party activists that the City of Oakland’s measures didn’t provide a public transit alternative, just worked to feed the city’s coffers at the expense of the poor.

“We do not have the transit infrastructure we should,” he says, and wants a moratorium on new roads; something he will push for even if he’s not Mayor of Oakland.

Don’s Mayor’s Office and Morale

Unlike many of the candidates, Macleay says he will have the same size of Mayor’s Office as present. Rearding organizational structure, Don says he’s like to keep Mayor Dellums fundraising system and staff. Overall he sees no need to expand the office, and wants to leave the matter of policy advise to the Oakland City Council.

On Oakland city employee morale, which has been poor for years, Don says he will work to make it easier for Oakland employees to talk freely about what they don’t like around them. He also wants to help Oakland employees succeed at their jobs.

Don Macleay Has Matured

In closing, Don Macleay has come a long way as a mayoral candidate. At first, I didn’t think he was really serious about winning this thing. But over the past few months, he changed. Don became much more engaged, present, and active as a campaigner. He’s honed and refined his message and deliberately positioned himself as more a “man of the people.” Macleay’s an excellent listener and perhaps has the smallest ego of any of the choices for Mayor. It will be interesting to see how he performs on election day in Oakland.